Entry tags:
magician's apprentice | been a hell of a ride but I'm thinking it's time to grow
Dylan knew, coming out of the hospital if not going in, that getting sober wasn't going to be easy. He knew he'd have bad days and good days and days in between, and every therapist he's seen since then, every meeting he's been to has only reaffirmed that. They'd also armed him with a bag of tricks to deal with everything and everything in between, but -- well, today is one of the bad ones and nothing is helping. He's been pacing the house like a madman for the better part of the day, trying to find something to hold his attention long enough that he can stop thinking about running down to the nearest liquor store. He needs to get out of his skin. He's just shy of calling his sponsor. He needs to get out of the house.
He needs to get out of the house.
Stopping midway through moving a pile of books from one side of the living room to the other, he latches onto that idea and turns it over in his head. He needs to get out of the house.
He's moving again a second later, though this time, it's with a purpose, a clarity he hasn't felt like he's had in hours, days, weeks. He goes to Jack's room, tapping lightly on the door, and then after a beat and once he's been invited in, sticks his head in. Flashing him a smile that's equal parts reassuring and strained (he's fine, they're fine, this is nothing bad, he's just a little jittery, don't mind him), he tells him, "Hey. Pack your shit."
He has an idea. It'll be good for both of them.
He needs to get out of the house.
Stopping midway through moving a pile of books from one side of the living room to the other, he latches onto that idea and turns it over in his head. He needs to get out of the house.
He's moving again a second later, though this time, it's with a purpose, a clarity he hasn't felt like he's had in hours, days, weeks. He goes to Jack's room, tapping lightly on the door, and then after a beat and once he's been invited in, sticks his head in. Flashing him a smile that's equal parts reassuring and strained (he's fine, they're fine, this is nothing bad, he's just a little jittery, don't mind him), he tells him, "Hey. Pack your shit."
He has an idea. It'll be good for both of them.

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When Dylan waves him forward, he steps closer, waving a hand a little awkwardly before he holds it out to her, to shake. "Um... hi. It's good to meet you."
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That in mind, for everyone's sake, when Bubu speaks again, it's in English. "Good to meet you, too." A beat. "I didn't realize you had time for a protégé, Jacob."
"It's kinda more complicated than that," Dylan tells her.
He seems understandably proud of that complication and her eyebrows creep upwards. She didn't realize Dylan had had time for kids, either.
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He looks to Dylan at her statement and his answer. "Yeah, I'm, um..." He pauses a long moment, not sure how he should describe himself. He's been calling Dylan "Dad" almost exclusively since they got back from Vegas, and he knows Dylan has referred to him as his son, but he's personally only referred to himself as such a couple of times, and never in front of Dylan that he can remember. He's not sure if it's presumptuous to now or not.
All that is likely obvious through the connection as Jack tries to decide what to do - and finally, his nerve gives out. "I'm a foster kid."
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Bubu takes another moment to study him critically, before almost comically, her face splits into a smile that's equal parts warm and sad. "Too bad Lionel's not around to meet his grandson."
Dylan's expression turns a little wistful, too. "Yeah."
She turns long enough to pat him on the shoulder, gently, and then returns her attentions to Jack. "In that case, though, I'd like to show you something, Jack Shrike."
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There's another little burst of warmth at Bubu's description of him, and at her naming him - and then he blinks at her when she turns her attention to him properly. "Um... yeah, sure."
He's still a little nervous, but he's eager, too.
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It becomes clear enough why Dylan doesn't follow as Bubu stops beside a bright green safe that seems to hold a place of honor among the rest of the inventory. The plate on the front depicts a woman, but more importantly, reads Lionel Shrike and below it Indocilis privata loqui. A magician never reveals his secrets. Bubu gestures to it, for Jack to take a closer look.
"We kept these here for your grandfather."
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"Holy shit," he says as he stops in front of it. He does glance back for Dylan now, but it's more out of concern for him, considering he knows very well what happened to Lionel, had known that before he had known who Dylan really was.
He turns his attention back to the safe when he realizes Dylan stayed outside, crouching so he can look at it better. "What does it say?" he asks, because he definitely doesn't know Latin.
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The safe is not locked, and on the inside, there's a stylized Shrike embossed on the metal. Bubu lets Jack have a moment to take it all in, and when he stands again, she produces a watch that looks identical to the one Dylan never takes off. She holds it out to Jack, so he can look at that, too.
"We also kept copies of his watch."
If Jack plays with it, he'll find that the dials on the side pull out and then fold out into a crude set of lockpicks. Dylan's watch doesn't work like that.
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He shifts a little to look at the inside of the door, brushing a thumb over the embossing. There's awe practically radiating off him, but it doesn't feel right to call this cool even though he thinks it is, not when he knows how Lionel died, not when he's felt Dylan's continued grief for his father and seen how it still affects him.
He straightens after a moment - and then reaches out to take the watch. He startles a little when the dial comes free, a moment of fear jolting through him that he's broken it. It doesn't take him more than that moment to realize what it is, though, considering the lockpicks he owns, and the smile returns. This, he does declare, "Cool."
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"There are a few other things Lionel left here," she tells Jack, without acknowledging Dylan, "but most of the rest, Jacob has in storage, somewhere. Those may be safer to ask him about." Little does she know that Jack has already seen some of Lionel's stuff, having been to the warehouse.
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"Thanks for showing me these," he adds after a moment. "Do you have other people's stuff here, too?"
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Yes, they have other things here, but she's not at liberty to show them to him.
"If you are looking for history beyond Lionel's, though, you may want to ask Jacob if you can visit the Archive." Which is reserved for Eye members, but the archivists tend to overlook people bringing their children along when they visit. It's assumed that they'll join the Eye themselves, after all. Doubly so in the case of a Shrike.
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He perks up again at that, though. "Archive? Like a magic library? Awesome."
He's definitely going to have to ask about that, the thought immediately and somewhat accidentally drifting down the connection.
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"Good," Bubu decides. After a beat, she turns to head for the front of the shop, expecting Jack to follow. "You should come back sometime in the afternoon, too. I have a grandson your age."
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Jack does follow when Bubu returns to the front of the shop, ducking back through the curtain after her. "Yeah, that's what Dad said. Guessing he's into this stuff too?"
How could he not be, is the implication there. He just wasn't about to ask outright if her grandson also does magic in the way he and Dylan do.
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Dylan, meanwhile, makes a face at her. "You know you've gotta live forever, Bubu."
She flashes him a sour look in return. "I'm 73 years old. I already have."
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Despite that, when she looks away, she tells Dylan, "Take your strange child and either buy something or get out of my shop, Jacob."
Dylan snorts, equally amused.
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He doesn't really understand adults, sometimes, but he doesn't think he's in trouble despite what she says next, so he smiles, but he can't stop himself from blushing, either.
"Definitely buying something," he tells Dylan, like that's even a question.
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"I figured that was a given," Dylan tells him, meanwhile, echoing him.
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He wants to check in, considering the minefield that is the shop's backroom and considering he knows Dylan was already having a hard time with memories of his father. He would feel a little bad for dredging them up again if Dylan hadn't been the one to suggest they come here in the first place.
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It's always a little bittersweet, seeing his father's friends, and obviously, he had no interest in seeing the thing that took Lionel Shrike's life. He did want Jack to have this, though, to know Long's and see some of his family history. He also probably should have come to see Bubu before now, and there's some guilt attached to that. And -- well, the list of pros and cons, both, go on. It's complicated.
"I will be," Dylan promises, if those conflicting emotions didn't translate well enough.
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Finally, he nods. "Okay," he says simply and steps forward to move past him, back into the shop proper. As he does, he brushes his shoulder against Dylan's arm, a hug without actually going for a hug, the gesture meant to be comforting.
He heads for a shelf of various decks of cards, glancing back over his shoulder to see if Dylan's following.
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Either way, he leans into Jack a little as he passes him, feeding something both grateful and warm through the connection as they touch. He lets that linger for a moment, lingers himself, then finally moves to follow Jack. He offers Jack a small, encouraging nod as he turns, but is otherwise silent.
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